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Famotidine — most travelers know it as Pepcid — is one of the most useful workhorse medications in an IV. It calms stomach acid, eases nausea, dampens allergic reactions, and shows up in our food-poisoning, stomach-flu, and severe-hangover protocols. Here’s the medical version of why.

What famotidine does

Famotidine is an H2 receptor antagonist. Histamine activates H2 receptors on stomach cells, which then secrete acid. Famotidine blocks those receptors, sharply reducing acid production. It’s been on the market since the 1980s, well-studied, and widely used in both inpatient and outpatient settings.

Why IV (versus oral) matters here

Oral famotidine works in 30–60 minutes. IV famotidine works in 15 minutes and bypasses an unhappy stomach. For an actively vomiting patient — food poisoning, stomach flu, severe hangover — IV is the right route.

What we use it for at Cabo Walk-In Clinic

  • Food poisoning — combined with Zofran for the nausea/vomiting cascade.
  • Severe gastritis — particularly after a heavy meal, alcohol-induced.
  • Stomach flu / viral gastroenteritis — part of the supportive bundle.
  • Severe hangover with nausea and “acid stomach.”
  • Adjunct in allergic reactions — H2 blocker plus H1 blocker (diphenhydramine or similar) is a standard hospital combination.
  • Some severe migraine cocktails — particularly when stomach acid worsens nausea.

What it does NOT do

  • Replace anti-nausea (Zofran does that).
  • Cure gastritis — symptomatic only.
  • Treat ulcers (PPIs like omeprazole are more potent for that long-term).
  • “Detox” — no mechanism.

Dosing

Adult dose typically 20 mg IV. Onset 15 minutes, duration 6–12 hours. Generally one dose is sufficient for an acute visit; we may write an oral prescription to continue for the next 24–48 hours.

Who should be careful

  • Severe kidney impairment — dose-adjust.
  • Allergy to H2 blockers.
  • Severe liver disease — generally tolerable but caution.
  • On certain medications with pH-dependent absorption (atazanavir, ketoconazole) — the doctor will coordinate.

Side effects

Generally well tolerated. Occasional: headache, mild dizziness, constipation. Rare: confusion in elderly patients, blood-cell suppression with prolonged high dose.

Why this isn’t on most “wellness” IV menus

Famotidine is a prescription medication. A wellness operator without a physician cannot legally administer it. If you’re nauseated and a non-medical provider is offering “stomach support” — verify what’s in the bag. Real famotidine requires a doctor.

Combination with Zofran is the typical pattern

For the most common Cabo scenarios (food poisoning, stomach flu, severe hangover), famotidine plus Zofran plus IV fluids is the standard combination. Each does a different job: Zofran stops the brain’s vomiting signal, famotidine reduces stomach acid, fluids replace what you’ve lost. Together they break the cycle in 30–60 minutes.

Cost

Famotidine is included as a per-physician add-on to relevant IV bundles — no separate line-item charge for a small standard dose. See our Hangover IV, food poisoning IV, and stomach flu IV guides for the typical contexts.

Frequently asked questions

How fast does Pepcid IV work?

About 15 minutes for measurable effect; full effect within 30.

Is it the same as oral Pepcid?

Same drug; IV route, faster onset, full bioavailability.

Can I just take oral Pepcid from a Mexican pharmacy?

Oral famotidine is over-the-counter in Mexico. For acute vomiting it may not stay down; that’s when IV makes more sense.

Is it safe in pregnancy?

Generally considered low-risk; the doctor will discuss specifics.

Book an IV with famotidine · Call +52 1 624 409 5065 · WhatsApp

Educational, not medical advice. COFEPRIS-licensed clinic. Famotidine IV is prescription-only.

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